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Singapore Pro-natalist programme LO: to explain why Singapore wanted to encourage population growth and how they did it.

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Presentation on theme: "Singapore Pro-natalist programme LO: to explain why Singapore wanted to encourage population growth and how they did it."— Presentation transcript:

1 Singapore Pro-natalist programme LO: to explain why Singapore wanted to encourage population growth and how they did it

2 Population pyramid for Singapore- what does this tell us?

3  Annotate the population pyramids to show key feature  Explain how the change in the population pyramid shows that Singapore has developed

4 The policy…..  Why did they decided they needed more babies….?  What did they do (what were the incentives?….?  Who did it involve…..?  Was it successful? ….?

5 “To sustain growth and vitality in our economy, we need a growing population in Singapore with talents in every field.” Said by Senior Minister Mr Goh Chok Tong on August 19th, 2006

6 NIC (newly industrialised country) Independence in 1963 and since, the citizens’ standard of living risen dramatically. It is the 5th wealthiest country in the world in terms of GDP per capita. 710.2 km2 – London is 2.4 times the size of signapore

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8 Anti Natal  The population doubled from 1947 to 1970.  The Anti-natalist policy 1966-1982  Government only wanted them to have 2 children  Policy worked too well

9 How did they solve it?  They introduced a pro- natalist policy to promote having babies. In 2001.  The slogan switched from ‘stop at two’ to ‘have three, if you can afford it’  Their target was to increase the population by 40% over 40 years

10 Techniques they used to convince people to have more babies  2 children = $10,000  And then tax relief on third child  Increase maternity leave from 8 weeks to 12.  Shorter work so singles got together.  Cheap nurseries  Preferential access to the best schools  Spacious apartments

11 Singapore pro-natalist video  This video includes the Prime Minister Lee urging Singaporeans to have babies. http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=kelly wonghm#play/uploads/3/UmJa6Lw4Y4s

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13 Problem 1 Social Barrier:  The highly educated women and less educated men tend to have more difficulty with finding more suitable spouses.

14 Problem 2 Life style choice:  Some people choose to remain single, get married older or have fewer children.

15 state-sponsored matchmaking events rock climbing for couples, a love boat river race, vertical marathon called “lovers’ challenge” in which couples run up a 43-storey office tower. Private sponsors have made their own contributions : tango parties spa packages Weekend getaways like a “love boat cruise” to a luxury resort with sex counselors, fertility seminars, therapeutic massages and a host of aphrodisiacs from which to choose. Even Pizza Hut offers a three-course “love meal” including a heart-shaped pizza. Romancing Singapore!

16 Problem 3 Financial Consideration:  High cost of living  Parents want higher standards for children therefore they work longer and have fewer babies.

17 Other problems, slowing population growth  Abortion is common – ¼ pregnancies are terminated  Divorce rates are rising  Family values are strained  Number of childless couples is 6% and rising

18 Were there other ways to boost Singapore’s population?  Singapore has experienced that importing foreigners can boost population size and sustain economic growth- but it is only encouraging graduates.  It already has a large amount of foreigners, only 74% are Singaporeans- the government wants the current cultural mix to stay the same- ‘foreigners’ are still subject to the ‘Stop at two’ policy  It could create a wide culture or conflict.

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21 Future prospects Singapore’s fertility rate is still decreasing with a dependency ratio of 37.2% The governments aim is to increase the population by 40% from 4.5 mil to 6.5, and create the 23 rd biggest city in the world.

22 Long Term Plans “The Concept Plan takes a long-term perspective of about 40-50 years. The starting point for planners in their review is the size of the population. Planners will base the Concept Plan 2001 on a long-term population size of 5.5 million. This includes citizens, permanent residents as well as employment-pass and work- permit holders. Why 5.5 million? This is not a target figure, nor is it an optimal population size. It is a reasonable growth estimate from today’s population of 4.0 million, in order to sustain Singapore’s economic growth and provide a critical mass for developing a vibrant city.”

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